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Hope and horror at Red Lake
There’s an old Ojibwe saying: “Gego baapiineminaken
gidaabinoojiiyug.” Never laugh at your children. That motto invokes a
sacred Anishinaabe value: “manaaji’idiwin,” or deep respect. We are to
respect others, no matter how young or weak or strange, in part because
what goes around eventually comes around. This especially holds true for
children. Not only because they have power — as elders will tell you,
the only person who ever tricked the Trickster was a child — but also
because that child will one day be an adult.
I thought of this ancient Ojibwe wisdom when I heard about the
horrifying and tragic school shooting at Red Lake Nation. It was
reported that during the assault the shooter, Jeff Weise, was waving his
arms and laughing.
Laughing. Who, I wondered, had laughed at him?
This question of respect seems central to any
understanding of the March 21 shooting. If we are to adequately
comprehend this tragedy, we must approach the perpetrator, his victims
and their tribal nation carefully and with utmost respect. So as we
begin the process of mourning this sad, senseless event, let us be clear
about one thing: at 16 years of age, Jeff Weise was still a child.
He was no monster, although some will doubtless say that he was. He was
no Nazi, no matter how bizarre his Internet habits. He was not an “angel
of death,’’ a “Red Lake rampager’’ or a ‘’lost youth,’’ or any other
gimmicky stereotype the media might cook up in the absence of
understanding. Jeff was a child. Yes, deeply disturbed. And one who
somehow lost all sense of “manaaji’idiwin.” Why?
I’m not going to pretend to know the reasons why an individual would
pick up weapons and start shooting children. Does anyone ever figure out
why these things happen? Did we ever discover the “one true cause’’ of
the Columbine killings?
These things are complicated — as complex and immense
as life and death and teenagers themselves. There can never be one cause
for events such as these, and we should distrust anyone who claims to
have easy answers. There are, however, certain conditions to consider,
certain questions to ask, if we hope to build a world in which such
things never, ever happen. And in Ojibwe country, we do have hope for
that world.
First, as we find on so many reservations today, Red Lake Nation is a
community of poverty. Thirty-nine percent of the population lives below
the poverty line; 4 out of 5 students at Red Like High School qualify
for free or reduced lunch. And we know that poverty breeds violence. It
just happens that way — there are no impoverished communities free of
violence.
Furthermore, this condition of poverty is not reducible to any failings
of the Red Lake people, but owes itself to a much larger and irrefutable
history of colonialism. Who among us has acknowledged that gaping
historical wound and the traumas it repeatedly engenders? Is it possible
to understand this tragedy separate from the related contexts of
colonialism and community poverty?
Second, Jeff was a visibly Indian teenage male, which means he was part
of the least-trusted, most-feared social group in northern Minnesota.
Everyone who lives in that part of the country knows it, whether they
admit it or not: Indian teenagers are generally viewed as a problem.
This is not the fault of teens (as if they would do it to themselves).
This is a problem with the larger society, and its name is racism.
What social institutions hold great promise and high
expectations for Native teenagers? Schools? Businesses? Mass media?
Government? No. As with other teens of color, in northern Minnesota
Native kids are typically more feared than nurtured, more disdained than
celebrated, and nearly always publicly discussed as carriers of
problems, not potentials. One predictable result of this general lack of
respect is low self-esteem. Little wonder that, as a Harvard study
recently concluded, 1 out of 6 Native teenagers today has attempted
suicide. Aside from perhaps family and friends, who in the larger
society is acknowledging that their lives are worth living?
Third, Jeff had no problem getting past the security system that Red
Lake already had in place at the school, including a metal detector and
a security guard. Presumably the metal detector went off, and he shot
the security guard. As many have already noted, Red Lake High School is
one of the most ‘’secure’’ schools in the region, with towering fences
and barbed wire circling the grounds. Can we now admit that excessive
security systems at schools probably don’t prevent massacres like this
one? Might we suggest that they could actually contribute to a sense of
children feeling like prisoners?
Fourth, as with nearly all Americans, Jeff had easy
access to weaponry.
Finally, perhaps most importantly, Jeff was raised in a larger and truly
worrisome cultural context of American violence. I’m not talking about
video games and movies, although these too are problematic. I’m
referring to an America that repeatedly sends a clear and disturbing
message to its citizens and children: namely, if you have a problem with
somebody else, violence is the best way to solve it.
At 16, Jeff would have possessed no memory of an extended period of time
when the U.S. wasn’t engaged in the practice of bombing some country it
had a grievance with. During his most formative years, he saw this
nation’s president abandon diplomacy and cooperation for “bring it on’’
and “shock and awe.’’ In this context, how can we reasonably expect Jeff
Weise, or any teenager, not to consider armed violence an appropriate
answer to life’s problems?
It will likely be concluded by politicians and pundits that this
shooting was an isolated act of violence committed by a lost youth, and
that we probably need greater security and harsher punishments for
dangerous teens. But clearly it was not an isolated incident. It was a
social incident. And Jeff was already subject to heightened security and
harsh punishment — which don’t seem to have done any good.
Let us stay focused on the big picture, the social context in which
children, including but not only Natives, are raised. From the very
moment of his birth, Jeff’s life was defined by violence — the violence
of community poverty, the violence of racism, the violence of little
respect and few opportunities, the violence of guns, security systems,
punitive politics and growing militarism. Until these acts of everyday
violence are put to an end, how can we ever expect our children to live
peacefully? How can we raise our children to treat themselves and others
with “manaaji’idiwin?”
America needs a Peacemaker to emerge, and so does
Native America.
One bright light during these dark days is the tremendous dignity with
which Red Lake Nation, so honorably represented by Tribal Chairman Floyd
“Buck’’ Jourdain Jr., is handling the crisis. In particular, Red Lake’s
refusal to allow media vultures to harass the community was an act of
great wisdom and foresight. The community is already reorganizing
itself, and their spirit is strong. Red Lake will heal from this. And
all of Indian country is behind them. There is courage and compassion
and respect there — and where those virtues exist, so too does hope.
Scott Richard Lyons, Leech Lake Ojibwe, grew up
at Leech Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota. He teaches writing,
literature and Native American Studies at Syracuse University
Scott Richard Lyons
14 April 2005
http://www.pww.org/article/articleview/6832/1/264
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